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MARY ALDIS 

AUTHOR OF 

"the princess jack" 

AND 

"plays for small stages" 




NEW YORK 
DUFFIELD & COMPANY 

1916 



*& 






Copyright, 1916, by Mary Alms 



//. 



&i> 



MAY 20 1916 
©CI.A431144 



The author desires to make acknowledgement for permis- 
sion to reprint to Poetry, The Little Review, The Masses, 
Others, The Trimmed Lamp, The Survey, The Los Angeles 
Graphic, The Chicago Herald and The Chicago Evening Post. 



CONTENTS 

I. CITY SKETCHES 



n. 



PAGE 



The Barber Shop 3 

Love in the Loop 8 

Converse 12 

Window-wishing 16 

A Little Old Woman 20 



Design 27 

The World Cry 28 

Brown Sands 29 

Seeking 30 

May 11, 1915 31 

Watchers 32 

To Maurice Browne 35 

Prayers 37 

My Boat and I 39 

Pictures 42 



PAGE 



Forward, Singing! .44 

Barberries 46 

Two Paths 48 

When You Come 50 

Rest 52 

Moriturus Te Saluto 54 

Flashlights 56 

Floodgates .63 

Chloroform 69 

The Beginning of the Journey 75 

m. STORIES IN METRE 

The Prisoner 81 

Ellie 86 

The Park Bench 92 

The Sisters 105 

Reason 110 

Her Secret 115 

A Little Girl 117 



I 

CITY SKETCHES 



Go forth now, moods and metres, 
Sing your song and tell your story; 
You have companioned me 
Through hours grave and gay, 
What will you say 
To him whose curious hand 
Shall turn these pages? 

Soon all my joy in setting forth 

My vagrant thoughts 

Shall pass 

Into the silence; 

Soon I shall be 

One with the mystery. 

My book upon some quiet shelf 

Beneath your touch 

Shall wake, perhaps, 

And speak again 

My wonder, my delight, 

My questioning before the night — 

And as you read 

Somewhere afar 

I shall be singing, singing. 



THE BARBER SHOP 

I spend my life in a warren of worried men. 

In and out and to and fro 

And up and down in electric elevators 

They rush about and speak each other, 

Hurrying on to finish the deal, 

Hurrying home to wash and eat and sleep, 

Hurrying to love a little maybe 

Between the dark and dawn 

Or cuddle a tired child 

Who blinks to see his father. 

I hurry too but with a sense 
That Life is hurrying faster 
And will catch up with me. 

Right in the middle of our furious activity 
Two soft-voiced barbers in a little room, 
White-tiled and fresh and smelling deliciously, 
Flourish their glittering tools 
And smile and barb 

And talk about the war and stocks and the Honolulu earth- 
quake 

With equal impartiality. 

3 



I like to go there. 

Time seems slow and patient 

While they tuck me up in white 

And hover over me. 

The room gives north and west and the sunset sky 

Lights the grey river to a ribbon of glory 

Where silhouetted tugs 

Like tooting beetles fuss about their smoky businesses; 

Besides, in that high place 

No curious passer-by 

Can see my ignominious bald spot treated with a tonic, 

Nor can a lady stop and bow to me, my chin in lather, 

As happened once; 

So I go there often 

And even take a book. 

There's another person all in white 

Who comes and goes and manicures your nails 

On application. 

One can read with one hand while she does the other. 

Because I feel that Life is hurrying me along 

With horrid haste 

Soon to desert me utterly, 

I used to take my Inferno in my pocket 

And reflect on what might happen 

Were I among the usurers. 

One day a low-pitched voice broke in. 
I listened vaguely, 



What was the woman saying? 

"Please listen for a moment, Mister Brown, 

I've done your nails for almost half a year; 

You've never looked at me." 

I looked at that, 

And sure enough the girl was young and round and sweet. 

She coloured as I turned to her 

And looked away. 

I waited silently, enjoying her confusion. 

The words had been shot out at me 

And now apparently she wished them back. 

"What do you want?" I said. 

Again a silence while she rubbed away. 

I opened my Inferno with an ironic glance 

Towards Paradiso waiting just beyond. 

"Well, rub away, my girl," I thought, 

"You opened up, go on." 

The book provoked her. 

"I'm straight," she said. 

"I never talked like this before. 

The fellows that come round — 

Good Lord! 

Showin' me two pink ticket corners 

Stickin' out the pocket of their vest, 

'Say, kid, — tonight, — you know,' 

Thinkin' I'll tumble 

For a ticket to a show! 

They make me sick, they do, 

Boobs like that; 

5 



You're different. I want to know 

What's in that book you read. 

I want to hear you talk. 

Oh, Mister, I'm so lonesome! 

But I'm straight, I tell you. 

I read, too, every evening in my room, 

But I can't ever find 

The books you have. 

I expect you think I'm horrid 

To talk like this — but — 

I got some things by an Englishman 

From the Public Library. 

Say, they were queer! 

He thinks a woman has a right 

To say out if she likes a man; 

He thinks they do the looking 

Because they want — 

Oh, Mister, I'm so terribly ashamed 

I'll die when I get home, 

An' yet I had to speak — 

I'd be awful, awful good to you, if only, 

Please, please, don't think I'm like — 

Don't think I'm one o' them! 

Whatever you say, don't, don't think that!' 



She stopped, and turned to hide her crying. 

I looked at her again, 

Looked at her young wet eyes, 

At her abashed bent head, 
6 



Looked at her sweet, deft hands 
Busy with mine . . . 

But— 

Not for nothing 

Were my grandfather and four of my uncles 

Elders in the Sixth Presbyterian Church 

Situated on the Avenue. 

Oh not for nothing 

Was I led 

To squirm on those green rep seats 

One day in seven. 

And now, 

The white-tiled, sweetly-smelling barber shop 

Is lost to me. 

What a pity! 



LOVE IN THE LOOP 

They sat by the fountain at a table for two, 

The traditional couple — 

An awkward, ill-dressed girl, 

With a lovely skin and a country smile, 

And the man who was paying for her dinner. 

There they were — 

Exploiter and Exploited. 

I could see only his back, clad in grey tweed. 

His neck rolled over his collar 

In a thick red fold, 

And his hands, which he waved about, 

Were fat and white with shiny nails 

And diamond rings. 

I wondered if he was offering her better clothes 

For the girl looked troubled. 

Her shirt-waist wasn't fresh, 

Her skirt was draggled, 

And her feet, curled up under the chair, 

Shifted themselves uneasily, seeking cover 

For most lamentable shoes; 

But oh, her skin! 

8 



Soft rose and the delicate white of summer mist. 
Her hair was the brown of hazelnuts after a frost, 
Glinting to saffron as she turned her head 
Quickly from side to side 
Like an enquiring dove. 

Soon oysters came; 

She eyed them with distrust, 

Then ate one thoughtfully and made a face. 

He seemed concerned 

And beckoned the waiter to remove the dish, 

Asking if she'd rather have a "country sausage." 

She showed her baby teeth in a happy smile 

And sausages were brought. 

She ate them all while he watched her enviously, 

Putting a little white pellet in some water 

For his second course. 

Champagne was set before them and he filled her gh 

While he turned his bottom side up. 

She sipped, and made another face, and choked, 

Then tried again and laughed. 

"I do believe it's good," she said, 

And finished the glass, 

Holding it out for more. 

"You'd best look out," I heard him say 

As he slid his hand along the table-cloth. 

She cringed away. 

"Oh, please, please don't!" she said; 

But he hitched his chair softly around the table. 

9 



I watched it all, 

Wondering miserably if it was my duty 

To warn the girl, 

And whether she would prove clinging if I did. 

Finally to secure her hands he turned himself. 

My God, what a mug! 

His beady eyes over his glistening cheeks 

Blinked like a hurrying pig's: 

His protuberent lips wiggled themselves 

In amourous expectancy 

While little beads of ecstasy bedewed his brow. 

I turned my chair around and raised my paper. 

Suddenly I heard her cry, "Oh, Mister! 

That fuzzy stuff you made me drink — my head!" 

And she grabbed her coat and slithered along the floor 

To the front door, calling over her shoulder. 

"Don't come. I want some air, 

I'll be back in a minute or two." 

After a startled forward step 

He settled back and called the waiter, 

Who hurried to busy himself expectantly 

With the inevitable reckoning. 

By the time it was ready, Mr. Amourous-One 

Was deep in the stock reports and dead to the world. 

The waiter stood on one foot and then on the other, 

Finally wandering off. 

10 



After some twenty minutes of troubled scrutiny 

The paper was laid down, 

And Mr. Amourous 

Looked at his watch and jumped, 

Then turned the bill and burrowed in his pocket, 

Pulling out change. 

Next came a leather wallet — 

And then what a bellowing rent the astonished air! 

"Eight hundred dollars gone!" he yelled. 
"Hi! get that girl, I tell you, get that girl!" 
But nobody stirred. 
Exploiter and Exploited — 



11 



CONVERSE 

They were two disembodied heads on bath cabinets, 

Just like "Une tete de femme" by Rodin, in a show, 

Save that each head was topped 

By a ruffled rubber cap, 

One rose-lined grey, one brown. 

They were two female heads, 

And yet they were not pretty, 

At least not then. 

They fixed their level-fronting eyes on a sanitary wall 

In front of them 

And waited. 

The Bath Attendant turned a crank, 

Consulted a thermometer, and vanished. 

Time draggled warmly by. 

Finally one head heaved a heavy sigh and turned itself 
And looked at the other head, 
Which bit its lip and frowned. 

Since names seem meaningless 

When souls converse, 

12 



Let us call these souls quite simply Grey and Brown. 
The one that heaved and turned itself was Brown; 
The one that bit its lip was Grey. 

"Are you pretending that you didn't see me?'* 
Queried Brown. 
"Oh no!" said Grey. 

"I've been meaning to have a talk with you," said Brown. 

"And why not now?" 

"And why not now?" said Grey. 

"You may as well understand," continued Brown, 
"You've got to give him up." 
"Him up?" said Grey. 

"That's what I said," said Brown. 

"You very well know 

His duty is to me. I bear his name, 

I've given him seven children and a step, 

All likely boys. 

He's very fond of them, you know." 

"I know," said Grey. 

"Well, what have you got to say?" Brown trembled on. 
"Why don't you speak?" 
Grey murmured softly, 
"Isn't it hot in these?" 

Brown looked at her and laughed. 

"You're pretty cool," she said, 

13 



"But I'd like to tell you here and straight and now, 

I'm tired of nonsense, 

Tired of worrying, 

And very, very tired of him and you." 

"Of him and me," said Grey. 

"I've cried and then I've laughed 

And said I didn't care," 

Said whimpering Brown. 

"I've dressed myself up beautifully 

And then again I'd slump," 

Said sniffling Brown. 

"But nothing mattered. 

If he came home bright and gay, of course I'd know 

He'd been with you, 

And if he came home different, then I'd know 

He wished he were, 

So gradually it didn't matter much 

Which way he was. 

And then I thought I'd try and keep 

The boys from knowing, 

So I'd make up lies and plan; 

With seven and the step 

It took considerable planning, 

But luckily the little ones don't notice. 

And now I've got you here, I'm going to have my say!" 

"Your say," said Grey. 

"I'm going to get your promise here and now 

To give him up for good, 

14 



Do you understand?" 
"For good," said Grey. 
"Oh yes, I understand." 

"Or else," and beetling Brown 

Grew dark and terrible, 

"You'll be the co-respondent in a suit!" 

"A suit," said Grey. 

"I said a suit," said Brown, 

"I mean a suit. 

Moreover, as you haven't said a word 

I'll bring it soon." 

"It soon," said Grey. 

And then the Attendant came, 

Looked at the clock and then the thermometer, 

Got sheets and led them out. 

"Unless — " said Brown. 

"Oh yes, unless — " said Grey. 



15 



WINDOW-WISHING 

Oh yes, we get off regular 

By half past six, 

And six on Saturdays. 

Sister an' I go marketing on Saturday nights, 

Everything's down. 

Besides there's Sunday comin'; 

You can sleep, 

Oh my, how you can sleep! 

No mother shakin' you 

To "get up now," 

No coffee smell 

Hurryin' you while you dress, 

No Beauty Shop to get to on the tick of the minute 

Or pony up a fine. 

Sister an' I go window-wishin' 

Sunday afternoon, all over the Loop. 

It's lots of fun. 

First she'll choose what she thinks is the prettiest 

Then my turn comes. 

You mustn't ever choose a thing 

The other's lookin' at, 

And when a window's done 

The one that beats 

16 



Can choose the first time when we start the next. 
The hats are hardest 

'Specially when they're turnin' round and round. 
But window- wishin's great! 

Then there's the pictures, 

Bully ones sometimes, 

Sometimes they're queer. 

Sister an' I go in 'most every Sunday. 

We took Mother 'long last week, 

But she didn't like 'em any too well. 

Mother's old, you know, 

We have to kinda humour her. 

Next day she couldn't remember a single thing 

But the lions on the steps. 

You know what happened the other night? 

Sister and I didn't know just what to do, — 

A gentleman came to see us. 

He said Jim asked him to 

Sometime when he was near. 

Jim's my brother, you know. 

He lives down state. 

We have to send him part of our wages regular, 

Sister an' I; 

He doesn't seem to get a steady place, 

And Mother likes us to. 

She's dotty on Jim. 

Sometimes I get real nasty — 

A great big man like that! 
17 



Anyway his friend came walkin' in 

And said Jim sent his love. 

Sister an' I didn't exactly know what to do, 

And Mother looked so queer! 

Her dress was awful dirty. 

He said he was livin' in Chicago, 

And Sister said she hoped 

He had a place he liked. 

He only stayed a little while, 

Till half past eight, 

And then he took his hat 

From under the chair he was sittin' on 

And went away. 

I said just now it happened the other night, 

But it was seven weeks ago last Friday evening. 

He said he'd come again. 

I dunno as he will, 

Sister an' I keep wonderin'. 

We dressed up «every night for quite a while 

And stayed in Sundays. 

Yesterday we thought 

We'd go down window-wishin' 

And what do you think? 

Just as she'd picked a lovely silver dress 

Sister jerked my arm, 

Then all of a sudden there she was 

Cryin' and snifflin' in her handkerchief 

Standin' there on the sidewalk, 

And what do you think she said? 

"I'd like to kill the woman that wears that gown!" 
18 



I tell you I was scared, 

She looked so queer, 

But she's all right today. 

Oh thank you, two o'clock next Saturday the tenth? 

I'll put it down, 

A shampoo and a wave, you said? 

I'll keep the time, 

Good-morning. 



19 



A LITTLE OLD WOMAN 

There's a twinkling little old woman 

Brings me sandwiches after my Turkish bath. 

Her cheeks are brown and pink, 

And her eyes, behind her gold-bowed spectacles, 

Smile in a curious fashion as if to say 

"I know you're worried about that letter in the pocket of 

your dress, 
Hanging out there, but I'll take care of it." 

She sets the tray down on a chair beside my couch 
And trots away to another languid lady in a sheet, 
And as I fall asleep she says to me 
"Don't worry honey, I'll take care of it." 
Perhaps it's only in my dreams she says it, 
But anyway she's there. 

Once after she had hooked me up 

She raised her sober dress 

To show me that she too could wear a lace-trimmed petticoat; 

And a dainty thing it was, with tiny rosebuds 

Festooned all around. 

She dropped her skirt and laughed. 

"I've got one . . . too," she said. 

This was uncanny, so I said Good-day. 

20 



Next time I went I met him at the door 

With a market basket! 

It seems he brought the dainties every day 

She made up into sandwiches for us who lolled about. 

I took a look at him, — 

A delicate, chiselled face with soft blue eyes, 

Under his chin from ear to ear a fringe of yellow down, 

Around a bald spot, curls of whity-gold; 

He blinked a little as she gave him charges 

Then wandered thoughtfully away 

Clutching his basket. 

He wore a black frock coat too big for him, 

And on his head, a round black hat like a French Cure's. 

So that was why she wore the petticoat 

And smiled so knowingly — 

But how she worked! 

I wouldn't work like that. 

Perhaps she kept that little thing for pleasuring. 

Well, this is a woman's world, why not, 

If so be that he pleased her? 

The steamy, scented atmosphere that day 

Seemed teeming with intrigue; 

I looked at the strapping, bare-legged wench 

Who brought my sheet 

Enquiring mutely, "Have you got a lover?" 

And when a person next me roused herself 

To ask the time, 

I thought, "Ah-ha! He's waiting!" 

21 



It chanced when sandwiches were brought 

I found myself alone 

With her of the spectacles and petticoat. 

I wanted to go to sleep, 

But I wanted more to find out how 

She got a lover, 

And how she kept him. 

After some skirmishing I asked straight out, 

"Was that your husband with the market basket?' 

"My husband's dead," she said, and grinned 

And took a chair beside my couch. 

"Who is he, then?" I said. 

"He's mine," she answered. "Mine! 

I paid for him five hundred dollars cool, 

And now he likes me!" 

I sat up at that. 

"You paid for him?" I gulped. 

"Why yes, he lived up-stairs, you know. 

His heart is bad; he hadn't any cash; 

He got hauled up on a breach-of -promise suit; 

I paid it for him. 

Now he lives with me!" 

She emphasized her "me" triumphantly. 

I looked her over. 

Certainly there was something there of vividness, 

Of quick vitality. 

He and his funny hat and goldy curls — 

22 



Well, anything may be. 

"Are you happy now?" I asked. 

She smiled and bridled. 

"The business pays," she said. 

"You ladies pay good prices for your food 

And then the tips besides. 

He gets the things for me and brings 'em fresh, 

Then what do you suppose he does the rest of the time? 

(His heart is bad, you know) 

Writes verses all day long for the Sunday papers; 

Mostly they don't get in, 

But every now and then he gets two dollars. 

I bought him an Underwood last week. 

He was so pleased, 

Only the punctuation isn't right. 

It isn't a second-hand; cost me a hundred and twenty-five; 

I saved it up — " 

The bell rang and she rose. 

"Say! please don't tell them anything about — 

About — my husband." 

And she vanished. 



23 



II 



DESIGN 

If all the world's a stage, why do we know 
Naught of the drama we the actors play? 

Are we but puppets, we who come and go 

Mumbling our parts through life's quick-passing day? 

What if some master hand design the show 

Planning a spacious pattern cunningly! 
Time, color, drifting human shapes all go 

Into a great discordant harmony: 

Let this one's part be cast in delicate grey, 

Let this a heavy purple shadow be, 
Here let there come one clear, cold, bluish ray 

And here — but hold! one actor suddenly 

In desperate rebellion cries his part — 
A scarlet tumult from his own hot heart. 



27 



TEE WORLD CRY 

Joy, light, and love I crave 

And shall discover — 
Life's wild adventure opening to my will: 

High thought and brave, 

The rapture of a lover, 
The Vision gleaming from yon western hill. 

Beyond my present sight 

There lies some sweet allure, 
Some crested glory waiting to be won; 

Shimmering in light, 

Beautiful and sure, 
Beckoning bright hands that call me on. 

I know not where it lies, 

Nor whither I go, nor how 
The way is paved — with pleasure or with pain; 

But the search is in my eyes, 

And the dust upon my brow 
Shall turn to aureoled gold when I attain. 

Oh, old old hope — 

Unfulfilled desire! 

28 



Pitiful the faith, 
Beautiful the fire! 

Know, soul who criest, 
Thy gleaming from afar, 
Thy quest of wild adventure, 
Thy sweet far star 

Shall be the bitter path 
To a high stern goal; 
So bow thy head 
To thine own soul. 



BROWN SANDS 

My stallion impatiently 
Stamps at my side, 

Into the desert far 
We two shall ride. 

Brown sands around us fly 5 
Winds whistle free, 

The desert is sharing 
Gladness with me. 

The madness of motion 

Is mine again. 
Forgotten forever 

Sorrow and pain. 



Into the desert far 

Swiftly we flee, 
Knowing the passionate 

Joy of the free. 



SEEKING 

Swift like the lark 
Out of the dark 

One cometh, singing; 

Silent in flight 
Out of the night 
Answer is winging. 

Forth to the dawn 
Leaps like a fawn 

A cry of high greeting, 

Into the sun 
Two that have run 
Seeking, are meeting. 



30 



MAY 11, 1915 

A prayer is forming on my tightened lips — 
Lord grant that I may keep my soul from hate! 

I have known love, I have been pitiful, 

Lord, I would keep my grief compassionate! 

Pain-maddened cries I hear from out the sea, 

Upstaring at me, faces of the dead; 
Those silent bodies seem to call aloud, 

Those silent souls are still and comforted. 

And we are here to bear the weight of pain — 
Oh, keep the poison from its awful task! 

Lord, let me be as they are ere I hate, 
Let me love on! this, this is what I ask! 

However long the way, there is a turning, 

Somewhere beyond the storm there lies a land 

Where Peace abides, where love shall live again, 

And men shall greet with friendly outstretched hand 

While little children laugh, and women weep 

With happiness — Oh, Lord, until that hour 

Keep Thou my hope, keep Thou my tenderness, 

Keep Thou my trust in Thy far-seeing power! 
31 



WATCHERS 

I watch the Eastern sky 

For a sign of dawn 

Long delayed. 

Such stillness is around 

That every separate sense 

Is twice-attuned, twice-powerful, 

And loneliness enwraps me like a sea 

Into whose unplumbed depths I must go down: 

A sea unsatisfied 

Where drifting shapes, wan-eyed, 

Reach forth wan arms 

Towards them who pause to look at their own souls 

Mirrored upon the sea. 

Somewhere a loon 

Sends forth its weary cry across the dark. 

Oh, wailing bird, I know, I know! 

I think tonight the soul of the world is desolate 

And you and I its watchers. 

Yet cease! oh cease! 

The night air quivers and resounds 

To bear your cry across the sleeping lake, 
32 



And I would have your silence 

While I make 

My own complaint. 

For I would ask why we who have so little space 

To live and love and wonder 

Must go down into eternal mystery 

Alone : 

And I would know 

Why, since that awful loneliness must be, 

We go about as strangers here on earth 

And meet and laugh and mock and part again 

With never a look into each others' eyes, 

With never a question of each others' pain. 

So, even as I hear your melancholy plaint 

Across the sleeping lake, 

I send my questing cry across the world — 

And as I watch and listen, 

Through the stillness 

There comes to me an echoing and a far reverberation 

Of the many who have gone 

Into the limitless mystery, 

And thus they speak — 

"We too have known your questing, 

We too have stretched our arms forth to the night 

And clasped its nothingness, 

We too have lived and loved and wondered 

For a little space 

33 



And then gone onward, 

And we seek across the silence 

To send our voices 

Out, out, across the dark." 

Is it your voice I hear, oh far, strange bird, 

Or is it theirs — 

Theirs who have gone onward 

Alone and unafraid? 

Is there an answer I may sometime find, 

Or is it that our lips are dumb, 

Our eyes are blind, 

When love would come? 



Now faint light comes upon the shadowy sky, 
The East is waking and the day begins. 
You send your cry across the quivering lake, 
I send my question out across the world, 
We watch, we two, 
Alone. 



34 



TO MAURICE BROWNE 

(On his creation of Capulckard in Cloyd Head's "Grotesques") 

Shadows are round me as the dawn breaks, 

Shadows with long white swaying arms 

And anguished faces. 

I see them meet and touch and part 

Crying their desire, 

While a bitter figure moulds them 

In a shifting decoration 

Which enchants, eludes and maddens, 

Imprisoning my dreams. 

Now they plead and droop and cower, 

Holding wan hands 

To whatever gods there be, 

Praying intercession 

From the malign enchantment 

Of their decorative doom 

Whence they weep their silent tears. 

Oh, Draughtsman terrible 

Who puts out the moon and stars, 

Who smiles and waves a hand 
35 



And puppet hearts are broken, 
Let them love! 
Only a moment in a theater, 
Only a moment under the stars, 
All there may be before the end- 
Let them love! 



The show is over. 

The swaying puppets of a little longer hour 

Go forth and cry out their desire 

To a Master of Decoration, — 

Their God unseen, 

And He, like you, smiles, puts forth a hand 

And t)lots the moon and stars 

And tears the glory from the earth and sky 

And cries: 

"Back to your places, fools! 

You shall not love!" 



36 



PRAYERS 

Day by day I tread my appointed way 
Greeting the sun with dutiful intent, 
Seeing his slow decline into the West, 
Watching draw near my night of quietude. 

Each day I see fade slowly back to join 
Those other days, unlived, unloved, unmourned, 
That have passed by in grave processional 
With never a golden one to mark their passing. 



Sometimes at night I ask the friendly stars 

"Tell me, what do I here? Why have I breath 

And this fair body in a world of shadows? 

Why do I live?" 

But the stars shine silently 

And make no answer. 

Sometimes I ask of God, 

"Dear Lord, I love Thee well 

But Thou art far away — 

Couldst Thou not send to me 

Someone on earth to love? 
37 



So should I love Thee more." 
But God sends no one. 

Sometimes I ask the far tumultuous sea, 

"Oh Sea, give me of your great beating heart! 

Let me be swept on the whirlwind, 

Let me be lulled and rocked, 

Let me be storm-tossed, made mad, 

Then — let me perish!" 

But the Sea roars on unheeding. 

So day by day I tread my appointed way 
Greeting the sun with dutiful intent, 
Seeing his slow decline into the West, 
Watching draw near my night of quietude. 



38 



MY BOAT AND I 

My staunch little boat is tugging at its moorings 

Eager to be free, 

Eager to slip out on the great waters 

Beyond the returning tides, 

Out to the unknown sea. 

My staunch little boat, unwilling prisoner, 

Frets and pulls at the anchor chain 

While the wind calls, 

"Come! come! 

I will bear you 

Out to the unknown sea!" 

Long time my boat and I have plied the harbour 

On little busy journeyings intent, 

Long time with wistful gazing 

I have listened to the calling — 

The winds with buffeting caress, 

The waves with ceaseless urge — 

Calling "Rest, rest, rest, 

Rest on an unknown sea.'* 

And now we are away 
Into the mystery. 
4 39 



Quietly the swaying waters 
Rock and beguile and soothe us 
That we may not know 
We are so far away. 

Along the shore 

Are hands stretched out. 

What would you with me now, 

Oh pleading hands? 

I come not to you any more, 

I have set my sail 

Out to the unknown sea, 

Would you have me stay adventuring? 

Would you have me come again 

To be amidst you 

With alien eyes and a heart unquiet? 

Oh cease your crying! 

I come not back. 

Long time my little boat and I 

Have fretted at the mooring, 

Long time we have looked out beyond the bar 

With a great questioning, and a great wonder, 

And then, an hour came which held the parting 

And we slipped 

Out, out, to the unknown sea. 



The hands stretched out have faded from my sight, 

The shore is dim, 

40 



The mountains fade into the limitless blue, 

Only the wind and the sea companion me, 

Singing 

"Rest, rest, rest, 

Rest on an unknown sea." 



41 



PICTURES 

I saw a little boy go hurrying 

Towards an old man nodding in the sun. 

He tweaked him by the sleeve 

And gazed at him with insistent frowning eyes 

Asking his question. 

The old man blinked and muttered 

And the child let go his sleeve 

And drooped and turned away. 



I saw a mother counselling her daughter 

About her lover, and the girl was sullen, 

Looking from out averted eyes 

For means to go to him; 

And the mother bowed her head 

And turned away. 



I saw two lovers meet with hungry arms, 

And kiss and speak and kiss again — 

Then speak with challenging tones and fall apart. 

I saw them turn with tightened lips made dumb 
42 



And eyes quick-quenched and dark. 
Slowly they went their ways. 



I saw a woman kneeling in a church, 

Her head was bent upon worn hands 

Clasped tightly. 

Her dress was black and poor. 

After a time she rose and shook her head, 

Then beat her fist upon the rail 

And clattered noisily down the aisle. 

At the door she paused, 

Narrowed her eyes at the holy water 

And passed on. 



43 



FORWARD, SINGING! 

Listen, girl, stand there near me, 
Give me your two fluttering hands, 
Then listen. 

Little hurrying human beings 

Are important and significant 

Only in so far as they can stand alone. 

Most of them stand sideways, 

Propping themselves 

Against this brother or that brother 

Or this sister or that sister, 

Leaving each prop 

Only to carom swiftly to the next. 

Now shall not every one of these 
Sometime discover 
If his prop fall down 
He falls as well? 

Listen, beautiful child, 

I would carve my destiny alone! 

As a keen-eyed captain steers his ship 

By the light of the far north star 

Awake, alert, alone. 
44 



So, laughing girl 

Whom I call to my side, 

Hear! 

I stand by myself. 

I can love, aye, with a fierce flame, 

But I love none so much, no man, no woman, 

That his passing or his forgetfulness 

Shall undo me. 

I and my soul 

Stand beyond the need of comforting. 

None has power to make me 

Helpless, incomplete, beholden. 

Now, bright child, golden girl, 

Warm woman with the fluttering hands 

Whom desire has brought, 

Will you come to my arms? 

I will give you love, 

No other lover can give you love like mine, 

Come! 

Ah, that is well: 

Quick, your mouth, 

And then forward, singing! 

But, — if you had not come, 

Laughing girl, 

I would have gone forward singing 

Alone! 



45 



BARBERRIES 

You say I touch the barberries 

As a lover his mistress? 

What a curious fancy! 

One must be delicate, you know, 

They have bitter thorns. 

You say my hand is hurt? 

Oh no, it was my breast, 

It was crushed and pressed — 

I mean — why yes, of course, of course — 

There is a bright drop, isn't there? 

Right on my finger, 

Just the color of a barberry, 

But it comes from my heart. 

Do you love barberries? 

In the autumn 

When the sun's desire 

Touches them to a glory of crimson and gold? 

I love them best then. 

There is something splendid about them; 

They are not afraid 

Of being warm and glad and bold, 

They flush joyously 



Like a cheek under a lover's kiss, 

They bleed cruelly 

Like a dagger wound in the breast, 

They flame up madly for their little hour, 

Knowing they must die — 

Do you love barberries? 



47 



TWO PATHS 

Today it seemed God bent to me and said, 

"Pilgrim, you are weary, are you unaware 

You have two paths?" 

And I answered, wondering, 

"Tell me of them that I may choose." 

And God said 

"You have set your face towards a far goal, 

To be attained 

Only with heartbreak of endeavor. 

It is written should you choose this path 

Many times you shall faint and falter, 

Raising yourself with bruised hands 

And bewildered eyes, 

And when at last 

You see the ending of the journey, 

Before eternal silence comes, 

You shall hear 

A little clamouring and tinkling of men's voices: 

But you will smile quietly 

And turn away." 

"And the other path?" I asked. 

In a different voice God said, 
48 



"The other path is short, 

It ends but a little way ahead, 

There is no attainment, no acclaim; 

Only darkness, quiet, 

Rest from desire, 

And memory 

In the heart of the beloved/* 

And I answered, 
"I have chosen." 



WHEN YOU COME 

("There was a girl with him for a time. She took him to her room 
when he was desolate and warmed him and took care of him. One 
day he could not find her. For many weeks he walked constantly 
in that locality in search of her." — From Life of Francis Thompson.) 

When you come tonight 
To our small room 
You will look and listen — 
I shall not be there. 

You will cry out your dismay 
To the unheeding gods; 
You will wait and look and listen — 
I shall not be there. 

There is a part of you I love 

More than your hands in mine at rest; 

There is a part of you I love 

More than your lips upon my breast. 

There is a part of you I wound 

Even in my caress; 

There is a part of you withheld 

I may not possess. 
50 



There is a part of you I hate 
Your need of me 
When you would be alone, 
Alone and free. 

When you come tonight 
To our small room 
You will look and listen — 
I shall not be there. 



51 



REST 

Often I have listened curiously 
To the sound of a simple word 
All seemed to know, 
And wondered why I could not find 
Its meaning. 

Often I have dreamed 

Of that great Nothingness, 

That Silence which shall come, 

And asked if that 

Were rest. 

To the unquiet sea 

I have gone down 

Seeking companionship, 

Calling out to the beating waves 

"Do you too ask for rest?" 

Of the wind and the rain 

Singing their requiem 

Over dead summer 

I have asked, 

"You will be quiet soon; 

Where do you find rest?" 
52 



To the white moon 

Sailing serenely 

I have said, 

"You are dim and old and cold; 

Have you found rest?" 

To the eternal sun 

Uprising solemnly 

I have cried out, 

"And this new day you bring, 

Will it hold my rest?" 

Once to my heart tumultuous 

There came a gleaming, 

A far prophecy that like a fairy benison descending 

Gave answer to my questioning — 

Strange message lit with wonderment — 

"Deep in the city's labyrinthine heart 

There shall be moonlight for us and white song." 

So ran the words, 

And like a diapason of sweet sound 

Across the stillness, 

Echoing, profound, 

There crept the promise, — rest. 

And then — you came. 

I turned to find your hand, your arms, your breast. 

Deep in the city's labyrinthine heart 

You held me close, at rest. 
53 



MORITURUS TE SALUTO 

When one goes hence 

By his own hand alone 

We look aside. 

In a hushed tone 

We say — "What pain has gone before 

The sudden end?" 

But I shall go 

Because I know 

No longer can the earth 

Hold any other joy for me 

Like this. 

One night we had together, 

Only one. 

In all the years 

For all my tears 

The gods have given me 

Only one night, 

And it is over. 

Now I am glad to go 

Into the Silence. 

54 



I have breathed the heights. 

I should but kuow 

The level ways and paths 

Of little valleys, 

I will not, this should be. 

So, Beloved, 

Remember 

It is because of happiness, 

Not sorrow, 

That I go. 

From the far coolness 

Of eternity 

I shall look out 

To the grave stars, 

Singing. 



55 



FLASHLIGHTS 

The winter dusk creeps up the Avenue 

With biting cold. 

Behind bright window panes 

In gauzy garments 

Waxen ladies smile 

As shirt-sleeved men 

Hustle them off their pedestals for the night. 

Along the Avenue 

A girl comes hurrying, 

Holding her shawl. 

She stops to look in at the window. 

"Oh Gee!" she says, "look at the chiffon muff!' 

A whimpering dog 

Falters up to cringe against her skirt. 



56 



A man in his shirt sleeves lolls against a tree, 

His feet stick out, 

His hands lie on the grass, palms up. 

He stares ahead. 

Now and again he turns himself 

As from the enshrouding darkness forms emerge 

Dragging their feet, arms interlocked, 

Wan faces raised to the flare of light. 

Sometimes these kiss, 

Scream in brief laughter, or throw their bodies 

Prone on the welcoming earth. 

The man watches them, then turns his head, 

Gets himself upon his feet 

And walks away. 



57 



Candles toppling sideways in tomato cans 

Sputter and sizzle at head and foot. 

The gaudy patterns of a patch-work quilt 

Lie smooth and straight 

Save where upswelling over a silent shape. 

A man in high boots stirs something on a rusty stove 

Round and round and round, 

As a new cry like a bleating lamb's 

Pierces his brain. 

After a time the man busies himself 

With hammer and nails and rough-hewn lumber 

But fears to strike a blow. 

Outside the moonlight sleeps white upon the plain 

And the bark of a coyote shrills across the night. 



58 



A woman rocking, rocking, rocking, 
A small hand waving, nestling: 
Outside, lights blurred to starriness 
And summer rain. 



Little waves slap softly and monotonously 

Against the pier: 

A triangle of geese honk by; 

On the darkening sand 

Fresh lines traced with a stick — 

"I am sorry, Forgive," 

And a little oblong mound with a cross of twigs. 

Near by a girl's hat and dainty scarf. 



59 



A smell of musk 

Comes to him pungently through the darkness. 

On the screen 

Scenes from foreign lands 

Released by the censor 

Shimmer in cool black and white 

Historic information. 

He shifts his seat sideways, sideways — 

A seeking hand creeps to another hand, 

And a leaping flame 

Illuminates the historic information. 



60 



Within the room, sounds of weeping 

Low and hushed: 

Without, a man, beautiful with the beauty 

Of young strength, 

Holds pitifully to the handle of the door. 

He hiccoughs and turns away 

While a hand organ plays 

"The hours I spend with thee, dear heart.' 



61 



A pink feather atop of a greying white straw hat, 

A peek-a-boo waist and skirt showing a line of stocking 

Above white shoes, 

Stand in front of a judge 

Who leans over a desk of golden oak 

And summons forward a sulky, slouching boy. 

"You are required by this Court," says the judge, 

"To pay over to this woman 

One-third of your weekly wage 

For the support of your innocent child." 

And the clerk of the court calls out 

"Next on the docket?" 



FLOODGATES 

The Man 

Dear, try to understand. 

I wish that you could see, 

Now I am free 

Of all the fret and torment, 

The little daily miseries of love, 

That I can take you in my arms at night 

With a quick tenderness, 

With a new delight, 

Yet go my way untroubled if I do not find you, 

Forgetting in my zest for many things 

There is a you. 

I wonder if you can ever understand? 

Do you not know 

That I would go 

Forth now to meet life's great adventuring 

Alone? 

I would be unloosed from why and wherefore, 
I would not be stayed 
By sorrowing or rejoicing, 
63 



Even the enchantment of your nearness, 

Or your touch at night 

Is powerless any more 

To come between my loneliness and me. 

They say that prisoners grow to love their chains, 

So now, after long years of bitter reaching out, 

Of crying to the winds 

And clasping only shadows of my dreaming, 

I love my torment. 

We are such old companions, 

Loneliness and I! 

We have learned to ask but little of each other; 

There is no longer any turning away 

With hurt, averted eyes; 

So, Beloved, 

Let me keep my loneliness for friend, 

The only friend I trust. 

When you and I first met 

And looked to each other's eyes 

Our swift desire, 

I gave with reckless hands 

My life into your keeping. 

Upon your eyes, your words, your body's grace 

I hung, poor fool, a-tremble; 

For you had power 

To blot the brightening day, 

To irradiate the night, 

64 



With your sweet hands 

To lift me to the mountains where the spirits danced 

Or drag me through a hell of furious pain. 

And you would like to have that power again 

In your two hands? 

Oh no, my little one, 

No, my pretty one, 

Henceforward 

For all your sighing 

You shall but have my sudden, strong caresses, 

My tenderness, my love, 

But know 

That out, out, out I go 

Into the sun 

Alone. 

The Woman 

So, Man of mine! 

I may henceforward ask 

Only your strong caresses? 

I am your little one, 

I am your pretty one, 

Even your Beloved, now that you are free 

Of little fret and torment. 

I may give you pleasuring, 

But no more pain. 

Is that your meaning? 

I would be clear at last. 

Oh Man of mine, 

65 



We are standing face to face, 
Now let there shine 
The search-light of our speech 
Across the night of silence. 

Before us two 

There lie dim years for traversing, 

Behind, a mist 

Through which we long time groped 

With futile hands, 

And now, today, we meet. 

Dear, do I not know 

That there were gleams across the darkness- 
Swift lightenings 

Towards which we onward pressed 
As, for an instant, 
Seeing our far quest 
Within our grasp? 

Perhaps these were your beckoning hands, 
Your dancing spirits on the mountain peaks, 
But not for long we saw them. 
And now today it seems 
That I must find 
What shall be done 
When you go out alone 
Into the sun. 

I have so often watched your silent face, 

Your quiet mouth, 

Your smooth, white brow, 
66 



And longed for speech! 

I have so often wished to tell 

Of pent-up treasures in my breast 

You could not find! 

I would have given you such golden wealth 

Had you but come! 

Had you but said "I want your all." 

But you were dumb. 

You went your ways silently 

And never asked my gift. 

Dear, day by day I lifted to your lips 

A chalice brimming with rich wine, 

And you but sipped a little and turned away, 

And the wine was spilled. 

The years have passed: 

There may not be upgathering 

Of wasted days, 

As seasons flushed and waned 

We have sown and reaped and harvested. 

Now, what shall come? 

I cannot go forth 

As you, into the Sun 

Alone, 

I cannot take 

My loneliness by the hand 

For chosen friend, as you. 

I am a woman and I want 

Not tenderness, 

67 



Not strong caresses only, 
But the soul of you, 
My Man. 

The Man 

Dear, give me your hands, 

Look into my eyes and tell me 

If you can find the soul of me. 

I think it has gone questing. 

Call it back! 

Recapture the winged thing, 

And I will give it gladly 

Into your keeping. 

But, dear heart, be fearful — 

Souls are delicate. 

What if mine died long since, 

What time it gave up seeking 

To find your own? 

Your eyes are wet, forgive! 

Let there be no more hurting, 

Joy there has been in our meeting. 

I would banish weeping. 

Let the still waters wash away pain 

Into the sea of forgetting. 

Still may we look into each other's eyes, 

Still answer to the senses' quick demand, 

But as the years have marked us in their passing 

So must we go onward — 

Hand in hand still, 

Yet alone. 



CHLOROFORM 

(Written in collaboration with Arihur Davison FicJce.) 

A sickening odour, treacherously sweet, 

Steals through my sense heavily. 

Above me leans an ominous shape, 

Fearful, white-robed, hooded and masked in white. 

The pits of his eyes 

Peer like the portholes of an armoured ship, 

Merciless, keen, inhuman, dark. 

The hands alone are of my kindred; 

Their slender strength, that soon shall press the knife 

Silver and red, now lingers slowly above me, 

The last links with my human world . . . 

. . . The living daylight 

Clouds and thickens. 

Flashes of sudden clearness stream before me, — and then 

A menacing wave of darkness 

Swallows the glow with floods of vast and indeterminate grey. 

But in the flashes 

I see the white form towering, 

Dim, ominous, 

Like some apostate monk whose will unholy 



Has renounced God; and now 

In this most awful secret laboratory 

Would wring from matter 

Its stark and appalling answer. 

At the gates of a bitter hell he stands, to wrest with eager 

fierceness 
More of that dark forbidden knowledge 
Wherefrom his soul draws fervor to deny. 

The clouds have grown thicker; they sway around me 

Dizzying, terrible, gigantic; pressing in upon me 

Like a thousand monsters of the deep with formless arms. 

I cannot push them back, I cannot! 

From far, far off, a voice I knew long ago 

Sounds faintly thin and clear. 

Suddenly in a desperate rebellion I strive to answer, — 

I strive to call aloud, — 

But darkness chokes and overcomes me: 

None may hear my soundless cry. 

A depth abysmal opens, 

Receives, enfolds, engulfs me, — 

Wherein to sink at last seems blissful 

Even though to deeper pain. . . . 

respite and peace of deliverance! 
The silence 

Lies over me like a benediction. 

As in the earth's first pale creation-morn 

Among winds and waters holy 

1 am borne as I longed to be borne. 

70 



I ain adrift in the depths of an ocean grey 

Like seaweed, desiring solely 

To drift with the winds and waters; I sway 

Into their vast slow movements; all the shores 

Of being are laved by my tides. 

I am drawn out toward spaces wonderful and holy 

Where peace abides, 

And into golden aeons far away. 

But over me 
Where I swing slowly, 
Bodiless in the bodiless sea, 
Very far, 

Oh very far away, 
Glimmeringly 
Hangs a ghostly star 

Toward whose pure beam I must flow resistlessly. 
Well do I know its ray! 
It is the light beyond the worlds of space, 
By groping, sorrowing man yet never known — 
The goal where all men's blind and yearning desire 
Has vainly longed to go 
And has not gone: — 

Where Eternity has its blue-walled dwelling-place, 
And the crystal ether opens endlessly 
To all the recessed corners of the world, 
Like liquid fire 

Pouring a flood through the dimness revealingly; 
Where my soul shall behold, and in lightness of wonder rise 
higher 
6 71 



Out of the shadow that long ago 
Around me with mortality was furled. 

I rise where have winds 
Of the night never flown; 
Shaken with rapture 
Is the vault of desire. 
The weakness that binds 
Like a shadow is gone. 
The bonds of my capture 
Are sundered with fire! 

This is the hour 
When the wonders open! 
The lightning-winged spaces 
Through winch I fly 
Accept me, a power 
Whose prisons are broken — 



. . . But the wonder wavers — 

The light goes out. 

I am in the void no more; changes are imminent. 

Time with a million beating wings 

Deafens the air in migratory flight 

Like the roar of seas — and is gone . . . 

And a silence 

Lasts deafeningly. 

In darkness and perfect silence 

I wander groping in my agony, 

72 



Far from the light lost in the upper ether — 

Unknown, unknowable, so nearly mine. 

And the ages pass by me, 

Thousands each instant, yet I feel them all 

To the last second of their dragging time. 

Thus have I striven always 

Since the world began. 

And when it dies I still must struggle . . » 



The voice I knew so long ago, like a muffled echo under 

the sea 
Is coming nearer. 
Strong hands 
Grip mine. 
And words whose tones are warm with some forgotten 

consolation, 
Some unintelligible hope, 
Drag me upward in horrible mercy; 
And the cold once-familiar daylight glares into my eyes. 

He stands there, 

The white apostate monk, 

Speaking low lying words to soothe me. 

And I lift my voice out of its vales of agony 

And laugh in his face, 

Mocking him with astonishment of wonder. 

For he has denied; 

And I have come so near, so near to knowing. . . . 

73 



Then as his hand touches me gently, I am drawn up from 

the lonely abysses, 
And suffer him to lead me back into the green valleys of 

the living. 



74 



TEE BEGINNING OF THE JOURNEY 

Where are you, Dear? 

What is it that I hold— 

A shape, a phantom, who will not ease my pain? 

O Beloved! My beloved! 

What is it comes between our seeking arms? 

Lip to lip we press 

And breast to breast, 

Straining to overleap the barrier, 

And all the while we know 

We are apart. 

We know tomorrow we shall be 

More horribly 

Alone. 

Do you remember 

When we first cried out each to each? 

How the valleys rang with laughter and gay words 

And eager promises? 

Do you remember how we told each other 

Pain was over, 

That nothing now could come 

We could not still with kisses? 

Do you remember those first days 

75 



When the world was lost in a dream and a forgetting 
And eternity was ours? 

Then, as the years followed, 

Do you remember how we found 

That pain must be? 

How, heavy-hearted, we gazed bewildered 

Into each other's eyes, 

Asking, why? 

One night you would not speak, 

And when I pressed you for your cause of silence 

You said "I tried to tell you once 

My heart's dim heaviness, 

But you are a man, you can never understand." 

And then I saw 

That we were far away from one another, 

For I had thought the same. 

And after 

In a quick ache of sympathy 

We kissed and clung, 

And then you slept. 

I heard the little sobbing breaths 

Like a hurt child's 

Of a loneliness I had no power to soothe. 

We asked so much! 

We looked to each other as some look to God, 

And when God came not 
76 



And our lifted hands were empty 
We cried out that love was dead. 

We have grown patient since 

And pitifully wise, 

We see how little may be given, 

And we are thankful 

Lest there be nothing. 

Yet even when I lay my wearied head 

Upon your knees and fall asleep 

To waken with your hand on my hot brow, 

Then, when I thank God, if there be a God, 

For you — 

We are apart. 

Yesterday I watched you 

Protect the child against the winter cold. 

Warmly you wrapped him 

While his baby face laughed back at you 

From its frame of softest fur: 

I think a great hand comes and wraps us so, 

Each in his loneliness as in an enfolding garment, 

That we shall be ready 

To make our last great journeying 

Alone. 

As the years go onward 

Little by little we turn 

And draw away from love's dominion, 

Little by little we loose the clinging hands 

77 



That hinder from adventuring, 

Oftener and more often 

We go apart 

To ask ourselves 

The inevitable question. 

The friends we seek are questioners 

Who strive, like us, to cross with thoughts 

The illimitable void: 

Therefore, Dear, give over 
Trying to comfort, 
Give over the wish to yield me 
All I need — 

Once long ago I lost myself in you, 

Once long ago I was but part of you, 

Bereft without you, 

Mad for lack of you, 

Now I am I, 

Preparing to go onward 

When the end shall come 

Alone. 



78 



Ill 

STORIES IN METRE 



TEE PRISONER 

"We had a prisoner once," the Warden said, 
"Who was no common man. I could not say 
To make it clear, where lay the difference, 
And yet, and yet. — something was there I know." 

"Tell me of him," I said, drawing a chair, 
Knowing that in the old man's heart there lay 
Many a story. 

"Willingly," he answered, 
"Yet when all's said, you'll know no more than I 
Why his words puzzle me; why, when I pass 
His cell, I always think that I can see 
His eyes, his following eyes, that seemed to ask 
Over and over again, some kind of question." 

He thought a moment, then began his story 

As if by careful measuring of his words 

He tried to make me see what he found dim. 

"You know the row of cells," he said, "they built 

To make the fourth row 'round the hollow square? 

They front the East, and so I put him there. 
81 



I'd hardly like to say what was the reason, — 
It seems so foolish; but, the day he came, 
Just as the big door opened, I had seen 
Him turn his head, and this is what he said: 
'And it is I, — I, who have loved the Dawn!' 
A queer thing, wasn't it? I suppose he thought 
That he would never see it any more. 

"It's strange how little things come back to you! 
I can remember when he saw his cell 
He bent his head, making a kind of greeting, 
Then quickly stepped across and glanced around: 
'And this is what I have to call my home' 
Was what he thought, I guess. It always seems 
To sicken me somehow, to show 'em in, 
The hopeful ones the most, I know so well 
How soon the eager look will disappear!" 

"But tell me what he was in prison for?" 

I said, and met the old man's quick "What for? 

Oh well, there wasn't room enough outside. 

Why do you want to know? What does it matter? 

He was no common man. You'd think by now 

I'd stop my foolish bothering. I'm used 

Enough, God knows, to tangled human threads — 

Oh what's the use to try and tell it now? 

I'm such a fool! I can't go by his cell 

Without the wondering clutching at me here!" 

He laid his hand upon his breast; I thought 

His mind had dwelt too long with pain, and now 

82 



His fancies troubled him. "Mad then, perhaps?" 
I asked, and saw my blundering words had been 
Salt to a wound. He turned away and said 
"No, no, he was not that, not mad," and stepped 
Beside a shelf of little useless things 
Fumbling among them. 

Presently he turned 
And placed within my hands a woman's picture. 
I took it silently, afraid to comment. 
"Think what you please," he said, "for I don't know, 
As no one came to take away his things 
I kept the picture. It was dear to him." 

A gentle woman's face looked up at me; 
A tender face, lips parted, young grave eyes. 
I seemed to see within their depths a question, 
And turned to meet the old man's twisted smile. 
Nodding, he murmured, "So, you see it too?" 
Then took the picture from me and began 
Again, though haltingly, his troubled tale. 

"At first he read and spoke and ate his food 

As if he thought he would not be here long 

And must be patient. Often he would ask 

What time it was, or if it rained or shone, 

Begging for outside news, and when I brought 

Letters or papers, seized them greedily 

And strained his eyes to get the contents quickly. 

Sometimes he'd hail me as I passed along 
83 



With such a flow of eager questioning talk, 
I wondered anyone so rich in words 
Could bear his solitude and not go mad 
With silence; but — our prison rules are stern. 
I shot the bolts that dulled that silver voice, 
And now I hear it echoing down the years." 

The old man rose and made a little pretence 
To put the picture back upon the shelf. 

"Well, time went on," seating himself, he said, 
"And as I made my rounds each day I thought 
The prisoner seemed to draw himself away. 
Not rudely; more as if he could not break 
The current of his thoughts, and up and down 
He'd walk; they all do that, but he as if 
He had some light inside his mind. Don't think 
I'm crazy, but, — it's hard to put in words. 
Sometimes I'd have my little try to break 
Across the distance. With a sudden smile 
He'd lay his hand upon me — 'Yes, I know, 
I know/ and so would push me to the door. 
I feared to go to him, and yet I loved 
The man as if he'd been my son. I knew 
The end was coming soon. My heart was sore, 
But I was powerless. 

"One thing alone 

Could wean him from his strange expectancy, 

A little written word that came half-yearly. 
84 



I knew that it was due, and when it came 
I beat upon his door; I had the letter — 
Slowly he turned to meet me and I stopped, 
Seeing it was too late. 

"Then from my hands 
He took the letter, lifting it silently, 
The way a priest lifts up the sacrament, 
Then gave it slowly back to me and said, 
'Why bring me bread? So little, little bread? 
Why eke my life along so grudgingly? 
Take back the letter, I am far away, 
Keep back the bread and I shall sooner know.' 
And followed by his eyes, I left the cell 
And soon he died. 

"No no, he was not mad, 
But only one to whom the Dawn was real." 



85 



ELLIE 

She came to do my nails. 

Came in my door and stood before me waiting, 

A great big lummox of a girl — 

A continent. 

Her dress was rusty black 

And scant, 

Her hat, a melancholy jumble of basement counter bargains. 

Her sullen eyes, 

Like a whipped animal's, 

Shone out between her silly bulging cheeks and puffy forehead. 

She dropped her coat upon a chair 

And waited; 

Then, at a word, busied herself 

With riles and delicate scissors, 

Sweet-smelling oils and my ten finger-tips. 

She proved so deft and silent 

I bade her come again; 

And twice a week 

While summer dawned and flushed and waned 

She used me in her parasitic trade. 

86 



The dress grew rustier, 
The hat more melancholy, 
And Ellie fatter. 

Each time she came I wondered as she worked 

If thought lay anywhere 

Behind that queer uncouthness. 

She had a trick of seizing with her eyes 

Each passing thing, 

An insatiate greediness for something out of reach; 

And yet she seemed enwrapped 

In a kind of solemn patience, 

Large, aloof and waiting. 

We hardly ever spoke — 

I could not think of anything worth saying; 

One does not chatter with a continent. 

Finally it was homing time; 

The seashore town was raw and desolate 

And idlers flitted. 

The last day Ellie came 

Her calm was gone, she had been crying. 

Fat people never ought to cry; 

It's awful. . . . 

The hot drops fell upon my hand 

While Ellie dropped the scissors suddenly 

And sniffed and blew and sobbed 

In disconcerting and unreserved abandonment. 

I said the usual things; 

I would have patted her but for the grease, 

But Ellie was not comforted. 
7 87 



Not until the storm was spent 

And only little catching breaths were left 

I got the reason. 

"I'm so fat," she gulped, "so awful, awful fat 

The boys won't look at me." 

And then it came, the stammered, passionate cry: 

Could I not help? 

Could I not find a medicine? 

We talked and talked 

And when at dusk she went, a teary smile 

Hovered a moment on her mouth 

And in those sullen, swollen eyes 

A little hope perhaps; 

I did not know. 

The city and its interests soon engulfed me. 

A letter or two, 

A doctor's vague advice to bant and exercise, 

And Ellie and her woes passed from my mind 

Until, as summer dawned again, 

I heard that she was dead. 

A curious letter written stiffly, 

From Ellie's mother, 

Told me I was invited to the funeral 

"By wish of the Deceased." 

Wondering I travelled to the little town 
Where the sea beat and groaned 
And sorrowed endlessly, 

And made my way down the steep street 

88 



To Ellic's door. 

Her mother met me in the hall 

And motioned, 

"She wanted you to see her," 

Then ushered me into an awful place, the parlor- 

A place of emerald plush and golden oak 

Set round with pride and symmetry, 

And in the midst 

A black and silver coffin — 

Ellie's coffin. 

Raising the lid she pointed and I looked. 

Somewhere in Florence Mino da Fiesole 

Has made a tomb 

Where deathless beauty lies with upturned face. 

Two gentle hands, palms meeting, 

Touch with their pointed forefingers 

A delicate chin, and over the vibrant body 

Clings a white robe 

Enshrouding chastely 

Warm curving lines of adolescent grace. 

No sleeper this, — 

The figure glows, alert, awake, aware, 

As if some sudden ecstacy had stolen life 

And held imprisoned there 

The moment of attainment 

Rapt, imperishable and fair. 

Even so lay Ellie, 

And when from somewhere far I heard 
89 



The mother's voice 
I listened vacantly. 

The woman chattered on, 

"The dress you know, white chiffon, like a wedding dress — 

I never knew she had it, 

She must 'a made it by herself. 

It's queer it fitted perfectly 

An' her all thin like that — 

She must 'a thought — " 

Then black-robed relatives came streaming in 

To look at Ellie. 

I watched them start 

And glance around for explanation. 

The mother pinched my arm: 

"Don't ask me anything now," she whispered; 

"Come back tonight." 

Then old, old words were sung and prayed and droned, 

While everybody dutifully cried, 

And when the village parson 

Rhythmically proclaimed, 

And this mortal shall put on immortality, — 

With a great welcoming 

And a great lightening 

I knew at last the ancient affirmation. 

When evening came I found the mother 

Sitting amidst her golden oak and plush 

90 



In a kind of isolated stateliness. 

She led me in. 

" 'Twas the stuff she took that did it," 

She began; "I never knew till after she was dead. 

The bottles in the woodshed, hundreds of 'em 

All labelled 'Caldwell's Great Obesity Cure 

Warranted Safe and Rapid.' 

Oh ain't it awful?" and she fell to crying miserably; 

"But wasn't she real pretty in her coffin?" 

And then she cried again 

And clung to me. 



91 



TEE PARK BENCH 

A Stranger, a Man, a Woman 

The pallid night wind touched their burning cheeks 
With fetid breath, whispered a dim distress 
And flickered out; while whirling insects danced 
Their crazy steps with death around the light. 

The Stranger 

The night is hot and the crowds intolerable, 
May I sit here between you on tins bench? 

The Man 
I s'pose the bench is free to anybody. 

The Stranger 

I've been walking up and down and wondering 
If I should speak. You sat here silently, 
You two. I could not tell what troubled you. 

The Woman 

I guess I was thinkin', Mister. I didn't know 

There was any other person anywhere near. 

92 



The Man 

I don't know who she is. She's nothin' to me. 
She's got a kid there in her shawl, maybe 
Her trouble's there. 

The Stranger 

It's hard to keep up courage; 
The heat is sickening, it weighs you down. 
I'd like to see the child; may I see its face? 

The Woman 
He's two weeks old today. 

The Stranger 

A sturdy youngster! 
What do you call him? What's his name, I mean? 
Don't turn away. I meant no harm, you know. 

The Man 

Didn't I tell you? Something's wrong, I guess. Maybe 
He's deserted, with another comin' on. 
Ask her again; likely she's needin' help. 

The Stranger 

You seem unhappy. Can't you tell me why? 

I'd like to help you if I can, because — 

93 



Well, once I had a little son like that. 

Come! what have you got to tell? Out with the story. 

See there, the boy is stretching out a hand, 

He knows a friend is somewhere 'round, eh, Sonny? 

The Woman 

You'd like to know what I have got to tell? 

I guess you don't know what you're askin', Mister. 

You see that big house over there? You see 

This baby blinkin' here? Well, that's the house 

His father lives in. I just found it out, 

Found where it was, I mean, then I come here — 

Oh, what's the sense o' tellin' any more? 

That's all there is, I guess. 

The Stranger 

I'd like the story; 
Sometimes the pain is eased by speaking out. 

The Woman 

I don't know why you want to know about me, 
It's no concern of yours, but if you'll promise 
You'll let him be, I'll tell you all there is. 

The Stranger 

You have my promise. 

94 



The Woman 

More'n a year ago 
It was, I seen him first, an' 'twasn't long 
Before I thought a lot and so did he. 
He said he'd take a flat and furnish it 
And we'd keep house together all alone. 
He said he had to travel, but he'd corne 
As often as he could, and stay as long. 
I'd worked, you know; I never had a place 
I liked to live in, an' he let me buy 
A lot of things I wanted; then he'd laugh 
And say I liked the flat so much, perhaps 
He'd better stay away and not muss up 
The tidies on the chairs. He always had 
A lot of money. When he gave me some 
He'd never say how much it was, but just, 
"Here's more to buy the tidies with," and laugh. 
It wasn't long — that little time. I like 
To think about it, but it seems so far! 
Just like another city or a place 
That wasn't any more; I don't know why, 
I guess the flat's there still, if I should go — 
Hush, honey, hush — don't you be cryin' now. 

I s'pose I'd ought to tell you that he said 

I mustn't have the kid. I didn't care; 

I didn't want it, neither. When I knew, 

I had to tell, because I got so sick. 

He didn't say a word to make me cry, 

95 



Not much of anything. He put a lot 

Of money in the drawer and went away — 

I never seen him since, until — today. 

Until — today — over there, this afternoon 

I seen him laughin' with another kid, 

And mine right here, right here, do you understand? 

The Stranger 
I think I understand, but please go on. 

The Woman 

I told you he'd put money in the drawer; 

I hated takin' it; but o' course it lasted 

For quite a while, — until I had to go 

And be took care of at a hospital. 

At first I tried to find him, but I knew 

He didn't want me to. I thought perhaps 

When I could take the kid, he'd like it then. 

When I was packin' up I found a paper, 

A bill, I guess, all rumpled, in a coat 

He left. It had a name I didn't know. 

At first I didn't think, but lyin' there 

All quiet in the hospital I saw 

It was his name, his truly name, and where 

He lived and all. This afternoon my time 

Was up — by rights I'd oughta left the ward 

Four days ago. They gave me this, for the food, 

Directions how to fix it right, you know, 



And told me I could go, and so I came. 
I thought he'd surely want to see me now, 
When I was well again, just like I was. 

I waited in the park and watched the house, 

It looked so big I couldn't ring the bell. 

Maybe 'twas six o'clock I saw him come; 

Just by the steps a baby carriage turned 

And waited for him comin' up the street. 

The woman wheelin' it called out "Look there! 

There's Daddy! Can't you throw a kiss to him?" 

I saw him lift the baby 'way up high, 

And carry it in the house. Then I come here. 

The Stranger 

I see. And that is all you plan to do? 
I mean, you won't go back? 

The Woman 

What can I do? 
You see, he doesn't want me any more. 
I'd like to die, but here's the kid! I guess 
I can't leave him. An' anyway I'm 'fraid 
To die alone. I don' know what I'll do. 

The Man 

I wish that I could think of anything 

To say that maybe'd help a little bit. 

May I just — shake your hand? — Excuse me, Mister. 

97 



The Woman 
I didn't know as you was listenin' too. 

The Man 

Perhaps you'd like to hear what's happened to me. 
You'll see that somebody has known the like 
Of what you're feelin', maybe it will help. 

The Stranger 

Ah! I was right then? Both of you are troubled? 
The night has brought us three together here; 
We must be friends. It's queer how loneliness 
Makes one reach one, as I have reached, to you. 
I think each one of us needs both the others. 

The Man 

Well, Mister, you don't look as if you'd need 

Our help, but maybe you do, maybe, who knows? 

I'll tell you what's been happening to me. 

I'm sick of thoughts goin' round and round and round, 

I wonder if anybody '11 ever know, 

I mean to understand, what I've been thinkin'. 

The Stranger 

Why don't you start? We'll try to understand. 

98 



The Man 

I'll tell you first that I'm a drinking man, 
And that's a thing that causes lots of trouble. 
She's not to blame, she stood it for a while. 
She had the children, there are two, you know, 
But I was pretty bad. I hated it, 
But there it was, and every day a fight, 
And oftener and oftener I'd lose. 
One day she went away and took the children. 
They served some papers on me; I was drunk 
And didn't care; but pretty soon I knew 
That she had gone for good. A lawyer came 
And talked to me, after she'd talked to him. 
And afterwards I saw her in the Court. 
The Judge said I must leave our house, and if, 
For two years, I could cut the liquor out 
She'd let me back. 

And so I got a room 

About two blocks away where I could see 

The children as they passed along to school. 

Sometimes I'd walk a little way with them, 

But when I couldn't answer all their questions 

I'd think I'd better let 'em be, and so 

I'd only watch 'em from behind the blind. 

Well, Ma'am, I tried my best; I made a calendar 

To mark the days. I got a good promotion. 

The time went by, and all the while I thought 

Two years are only seven hundred days 

99 



And thirty over! I can stick it out! 

And then one day I'll dress myself up clean 

And meet the children and we'll go back home. 

I'd marked the calendar six hundred off 

And eighty-six, and forty-four were left. 

The heat came on and took the starch all out 

Of everything. I didn't care what happened. 

I thought she didn't mean to keep her promise — 

A week ago — oh, well, you know the rest. 

I don't know where I've been. I'd like to die, 

Only I've been so lonesome in that room. 

I seem to be afraid to die alone! 

The Woman 

I'm awful sorry, Mister, awful sorry. 

Seems like tonight most everybody's luck 

Has all gone back on 'em. Thank you for tellin'! 

The Stranger 

There's no use sitting here in silence, is there? 

We've got to find some way to help you both. 

I'd like to if I can, but anyhow, 

We've helped each other just by speaking out. 

If you'll wait here I'll get a cab and take 

You and the baby to the Sisters' Home. 

Perhaps you'll come to my office in the morning; 

I'd like to talk to you; I'm sure we'll find 

There's something we can plan. Here is the address. 

100 



I sha'n't be long, keep talking so's to cheer her, 
It was a kindly thought of yours to tell 
Your story after hers. We'll find some way. 

The Woman 
What 'ud he mean? About the Sisters' Home? 

The Man 
Some place where you an' the kid can go, I s'pose. 

The W t oman 

It's queer how everj'body's good to you 
'Ceptin' the only one you want to be. 

The Man 

He said it wasn't any use to sit 
Here silent; that you'd better speak it out; 
It always helped. He said he'd find a way. 
Do you believe there's anything ahead 
For you or me? I wonder if there is. 

The Woman 

I'm done with wonderin' long ago, I know! 

I want to die! God, how I want to die! 

But here's the kid, he didn't ask to come, 

And he's so little, what 'ud become of him? 

101 



The Man 
Do you believe there's anything — over there? 

The Woman 
There's rest. 

The Man 

I know there's rest, but when I've sat 
All by myself there in that little room 
Thinking things out, sometimes it seemed there must 
Be something more. I'd mighty well like to know. 

The Woman 

If I could find someone to take the kid 
I'd like to rest, just rest, I wouldn't want 
Much of anything more. There isn't anything. 
I wish I wasn't scared to die alone. 

The Man 
You said that once before. Do you mean it, really? 

The Woman 

What are you thinkin' about? Say it out, say it out! 

102 



The Man 

What if we went together, you and I? 
There ain't any use of livin' any more. 
We'd find out something, anyhow. 



The Woman 

You mean — 

The Man 

I mean I'm sick o' livin', so are you. 
Put the kid down there by the evergreens. 
He'll come and find it — he said he'd get a cab; 
He'll take it to the Sisters. Oh, I'm crazy! 
Don't put it there! Take it up again, I say! 
A little kid like that! Don't listen to me. 

The Woman 
He's sleeping now; he'll never know what's happened. 

The Man 

You're goin' to? Well, come along then fast 
Or he'll come back. We're both of us crazy now, 
But what's the sense of livin' any more? 
Maybe there's something better — over there. 
8 103 



The Woman 

Wait till I fix him comfortable. Say, Mister, 

I was lookin' at the river, by the pier, 

Only I was afraid. Will you stay beside me? 

The Man 
Yes, that's the place, come quickly, 'twon't take long. 

The Woman 

Maybe we could find a piece of iron 

Or something heavy, so's they wouldn't find us; 

There's lots around the pier. 

The Man 

I'll tell you what: 
I'll tie our hands together to the iron 
So the waves won't — 



104 



THE SISTERS 

We four 

Live here together 

My three old sisters and I 

In a white cottage 

With flowers on each side of the path up to the door. 

It is here we eat together, 

At eight, one, and seven, 

All the year round, 

It is here we sew together 

On garments for the Church sewing society 

Here, — behind our fresh white dimity curtains 

That I'll soon have to do up and darn again. 

It is this cottage we mean 

When we use the word Home. 

Is it not here we lie down and sleep 

Each night all near together? 

We never meet 

My three old sisters and I. 

We never look into each others' eyes 

We never look into each others' souls, 

Or if we do for a moment 

We quickly begin to talk about the jam 

105 



How much sugar to put in and when. 
We run away and hide, like mice before the light; 
We are afraid to look into each others' souls 
So we keep on sewing, sewing. 

My three old sisters are old 

Very old. 

It is not such a great while since they were born 

Yet they are old. 

I think it is because they will not look and see. 

I am not old 

But pretty soon I will be. 

I was thinking of that when I went to him 

Where he was waiting. 

My sisters had been talking together all the long afternoon 

While I sat sewing and silent, 

Clacking, clacking away while the lilac scent came in at the 

window 

And the branches beckoned and sighed. 

This is what they said — 

"How did that paper come into our house?" 

"Fit to be burnt, don't you think?" 

Then the third, "It's a shameless sheet 

To print such a sensual thing." 

The paper lay on the table there, between my three sisters 

With my poem in it, — 

My little happy poem without any name. 

I had been with him when I wrote it and I wanted him again. 

The words arose in my heart clamouring for birth — 

106 



And there they were, between my three sisters. 

Each read it in turn 

Holding the paper far off with the tips of her fingers. 

Then they hustled it into the fire 

Giving it an extra poke with the tongs, a vicious poke. 

Then each sister settled back to her sewing 

With a satisfied air. 

I looked at them and I wondered. 

I looked at each one, 

And I went to him that night — 

Where he was waiting. 



My three old sisters are dying 

Though they do not know it. 

They are not dying serenely 

After life is over, 

They are just getting dryer and dryer 

And sharper and sharper; 

Soon there will not be any more of them at all. 



I am not like them 

I cannot be 

For I have a reason for living. 

While they were picking their little pale odourless blossoms 

I gathered my great red flower 

And oh I am glad, glad, 

For now when the time comes I can die serenely, 

I can die after living. 

107 



But first what is to come? 

I am going to give my three old sisters a shock 

Then what a rumpus there will be! 

They will upbraid and reproach 

And then they will whisper to each other, nodding slowly 

and sadly 
Telling each other it is not theirs to judge. 
So they will become kind and pitiful 
Affirming that I am their sister 
And that they will stick by and see me through. 
But underneath they will be touching me with the lifted 

tips of their fingers. 
They would like to hustle me into the fire 
With an extra poke of the tongs. 

Perhaps I will pretend to hang my head, 

Perhaps I will to please them, 

I am very obliging — 

But in my heart I shall be laughing with a great laughter, 

A great exaltation. 

Yes they will upbraid and reproach 

In grave and sisterly accents 

And mourn over me, 

One who has fallen; 

Yet I suspect 

As each one goes to her cold little room, 

Deep in her breast she will envy 

With a terrible envy 

The child that is mine 

108 



And the night 

The incredible night 

When the sun and the moon and the stars 

Bent down 

And gave me their secrets. 



109 



REASON 

Doctor! Doctor! I want you to come in. 

Doctor! Don't you hear me? Don't go by! 

That's right, come in here now and shut the door. 

Sit down there in that chair 

And listen. 

Don't sit there with that silly smile all over you. 

I'm going to make you listen. 

You know when I first came they wanted me to talk. 

I could see them trying, with little tricks and questions. 

Well, now I will, — 

I'll tell you if you'll let me out. 

Will you, Doctor? Will you? 

Those bars there at the window make me sick, 

And the screaming all around. 

You have to holler too, to keep from hearing! 

The nurse said I'd be in the padded room 

If I kept on — 

Say, Doctor, will you let me out 

After I've told you everything there is? 

Will you? Will you? Will you? 

Oh very well, 

You can open the door then now. 

110 



I don't want you any more; I'll never tell — 

Say, Doctor, don't go yet awhile; 

Turn round, don't go, I want to talk to you. 

There, please sit down again, I'll promise not to holler. 

I'll tell you all about it and then you'll see — 

You'll let me go, I know you will. 

I tell you I've got to go and find 'em, 

Find 'em all — Father and Grandfather, 

All that made me go back home, 

That made me do it — 

But you don't know, 

I'll have to find some place to start at. 

The first night that he tried to get at me, and he like that, 

I cried, 

Soon as he saw me crying he went off 

And got a quilt 

And made a bed out in the sitting-room. 

He got up early so I didn't see him. 

I thought all day, 

And I kissed him when he came at supper time. 

That night he seemed just like he was at first, 

I mean when we were married first, 

I thought he wouldn't do it ever again — 

Say, Doctor, don't you tell, 

But somebody came when I was out 

And fixed his food up so's he'd want the stuff, 

I know who it was, but I won't tell, 

Not till I'm out of here. 

Ill 



She did it out of spite, I know, I know — 

Doctor, who is that hollerin'? Make her stop — 

I guess you'd think it "mattered" some 

If you heard it all the time — 

Well, finally I couldn't keep him in the sitting-room, 

I had to let him in, he hammered so, 

And then — Oh, Doctor, stop her please! 

I don't see what she's hollerin' for, 

Nobody got in her bed reeling drunk — 

I couldn't help him coming — I couldn't, an' I tried! 

Next day I went around and did the dishes up, 

And cooked the dinner ready, and all the time I thought 

"Supposing it's happened — what'll the child be then? 

What'll I have to bring into the world? 

Supposing it's happened — " 

Perhaps it was nearly supper time, 

I don't know clearly, 

But I couldn't stay, I couldn't! 

I left a letter for him and went home. 

I walked around the corner of the house and there they were 

Sitting at supper, Father and Grandfather 

And Ma and little Ben. 

I stood and looked at them. 

It seemed such a little while since I was sitting there 

Not thinkin' anything, 

Finally I went in and said 

"I've come home, — I've come away from Jim, I mean. 

112 



Don't everybody look at me like that — 
I tell you I've come home." 

Then Ma got up and took me in her room 

And fixed the bed for me 

She said we'd talk it over in the morning. 

I stayed pretty near two months at home, 

And all the while Father and Grandfather 

And even little Ben 

Were at me to go back, 

Father kept saying all he wanted was my happiness. 

And then they got the clergyman 

And he talked just the same. 

And then Jim came. 

They all were nice to him and Jim was dreadfully sorry. 

He hadn't had a drop, he said, and if I'd come 

He'd never touch a single thing again — 

Oh, Doctor, make her stop! 

Go make her stop, I say, what's she got to holler for? 

Don't forget you promised if I'd tell 

You'd let me out — 

Do you want to hear the rest? 

I'm telling you straight enough, more'n I told the family — 

I never told them anything, 

I mean what I thought might happen, 

And nobody ever had the sense to guess 

What I was afraid of, 

Nobody but Ma, 

113 



And after the first she didn't do anything but cry 
And say Father knew best. 

The second time Jim came, I said I'd go, 

I was so tired of everybody talkin' at me — 

Oh I don't want to tell you any more — 

I'm crazy with her hollerin'. 

You know the rest — I squeezed his eyes out — 

'Cause he was lookin' at me 

When I let him in — after his hammerin' — 

Then they brought me here — 

Doctor, I've told you everything. 

Doctor, let me out! 

Let me out! Let me out! Let me out! 



114 



HER SECRET 

My secret and I stand here in front of the glass. 

We are bedecking ourselves for an evening of gayety. 

We look down and make our lips smile — 

We look up and make ourselves laugh, 

And then we turn and look into the glass again 

To see if others will believe that our eyes are smiling too. 

How long will it last, the evening? 

It will be three hours at least, maybe four. 

There will be music and bright dresses and clinking and 

chattering 
And everybody will laugh; there will be a great deal of 

laughter. 
Everybody will go about with smiling lips, 
But if you stop and look 
You will see that everybody's eyes are hungry. 

None of them shall know my secret 

No one knows that — 

Not any one in all the world. 

There was one other knew 

But he is dead. 

I heard that he was dead just now — 

115 



A little while ago — 

Just a few minutes ago by the clock. 

I was putting on my beautiful dress 

When I heard a list read out from the paper, many names, 

A long, long list. 

I went on fastening my embroidered slippers 

While they read and read — 

It came while I was buttoning my gloves, my long gloves; 

There are a number of buttons. 

No one shall guess my secret. 

There is a woman somewhere, 

I do not know where she is; 

But all her friends are hastening, 

Coming from all about 

To surround her with their melancholy faces. 

Soon they will get for her a black dress and a long black veil. 

They will lead her faltering to a church, 

Her two wondering children held to her side, one by each 

hand. 
She will be very important. 
They will say beautiful things about him — 
Beautiful sad things — 

And all the time, hid by her long black veil, 
Her eyes will be smiling — smiling. 

And what have I of him? 

What shall I take with me to the party? 

Only the memory of that last dawn 

When I gave him all and bade him go. 

116 



A LITTLE GIRL 



I see a little girl sitting bent over 

On a white stone door-step. 

In the street are other children running about; 

The shadows of the waving trees flicker on their white dresses. 

Some one opens the door of the house 

And speaks to the child on the steps. 

She looks up and asks an eager question. 

The figure shakes her head and shuts the door. 

The child covers up her face 

To hide her tears. 



117 



II 



Three children are playing in a garden — 
Two boys and an awe-struck little girl; 
They have plastered the summer-house with clay, 
Making it an unlovely object. 

A grown-up person comes along the path. 

The little girl runs to her and stops, 

Asking the same question — "Where is my Mother?" 

The grown-up person does not make any answer. 

She looks at the summer-house and passes along the path. 

The little girl goes slowly into the house 
And climbs the stairs. 



118 



Ill 

The little girl is alone in the garden. 

A white-haired lady of whom she is afraid 

Comes to find her and tell her a joyful thing. 

The little girl runs to the nursery. 

The young nurse is doing her hair in front of the glass. 

The little girl sees how white her neck is 

And her uplifted arms. 

Tomorrow they will be gone — they will not be here — 
They are going to find — Her. 
The young nurse turns and smiles 
And takes the little girl in her arms. 



119 



IV 



The little girl is travelling on a railway train, 
Everything rushes by very fast, — 
Houses, and children in front of them, 
Children who are just staying at home. 

The train cannot go fast enough, 

The little girl is saying over and over again, 

"My Mother— My onliest Mother— 

I am coming to you, coming very fast." 



120 



The little girl looks up at a great red building 

With a great doorway. 

It opens and the little girl is led in, 

Looking all about her. 

A Lady in a white dress and white cap comes. 

After a long time 

A man in a black coat comes in. 

He says "She is not well enough, I am afraid. 

The little girl is led away. 

She always remembers the words 

The man in the black coat said. 



121 



VI 



The little girl is waiting in the big hallway, 

In the house of the white-haired lady. 

At the end of the path she can see the summer-house 

With its queer grey cover. 

The hall clock ticks very slowly. 
The hands must go all around again 
Before the mother will come. 

Now it is night. 

The little girl is lying in her bed. 

There is a piano going somewhere downstairs. 

She is telling herself a story and waiting. 

Soon She will come in at the door. 

There will be a swift shaft of light 

Across the floor. 

And She will come in with a rustling sound. 

She will lie down on the bed 

And the little girl will stroke her dress and crinkle it 

To make the sound again. 

Pretty soon the mother will step slowly and softly to the door, 

122 



And quietly turn the handle. 

The little girl will speak and stop her, 

Asking something she has asked many times before, — "My 

Father?" 
But the mother has never anything to answer. 



123 



VII 



The mother and the little girl are sitting together sewing. 

Outside there is snow. 

A woman with a big white apron 

Comes to the door of the room and speaks. 

The mother drops her work on the floor 
And runs down the stairs. 

The little girl stands at the head of the stairs 
And cries out "My Father!" but no one hears. 
They pass along the hall — 

The little girl creeps down the stairs, 
But the door is closed. 



124 



VIII 

The little girl is held and rocked, 
Held so tightly it hurts her. 
She moves herself free. 

Then quickly she puts her face up close, 
And there is a taste of salt on her tongue. 



125 



IX 

In a bed in an upper chamber, 

A bed with high curtains, 

A woman sits bowed over. 

Her hair streams over her shoulders, 

Her arms are about two children. 

The older one is trying to say comforting things, 
The little girl wants to slip away, — 
There are so many people at the foot of the bed- 
Out of the window, across the yellow river 
There are houses climbing up the hillside. 
The little girl wonders if anything like this 
Is happening in any of those houses. 



126 



Many children and grown-up people 

Are standing behind their chairs around a bright table 

Waiting for the youngest child to say grace. 

It is very troublesome for the youngest child 

To get the big words out properly. 

The little girl interrupts and says the grace quickly. 

The white-haired lady of whom the little girl is afraid 

Is angry. 

The little girl breaks away and runs 

To the room of the bed with the high curtains. 

She rushes in — 

The room is empty. 

She comes back to the table, 

But she does not dare to ask the question. 

She remembers the great red building 

With the great doorway. 



127 



XI 



The little girl is trying to read a fairy story. 

There is nobody in the garden. 

There is nobody in the house but the white-haired lady. 

Someone comes to tell her her father is there — 
She does not want to see him, 
She is afraid. 



128 



XII 

The front door is open. 

There is rain, leaves are whirling about. 

A carriage with two horses 

And a coachman high up, holding a long whip, 

Stands waiting in front of the door. 

The little girl is holding onto the banisters. 

They take away her hands from the banisters 

And lead her to the carriage in front of the door. 

Someone gets in behind her, 

The carriage door is shut, 

The little girl draws herself to the far corner. 

They drive away. 

The little girl looks back out of the window. 



129 



XIII 

The little girl is in a strange house 

Where there are young men called uncles 

Who talk to her and laugh. 

A large lady sits by the table and knits and smiles, 

In her basket are different coloured balls of wool, 

Pretty colours, but not enough to make a pattern. 

There is a curly soft little black dog 

That hides under the table. 

The uncles pull him out, 

And he tries to hold onto the carpet with his claws. 

The little girl laughs — 

But at the sound she turns away 

And goes up to her room and shuts the door. 

Pretty soon the large lady comes to her 

And takes her on her lap and rocks and sings. 



130 



XIV 

The little girl has grown taller, 

She is fair and sweet and ready for love, 

But over her is a great fear 

As she remembers her mother's weeping. 



THE END 



W 13 










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